Every picture has a story. Naylor tells of how General Eisenhower asked "Doc"
Edgerton to select some of his associates at MIT to take pictures of Normandy
Beach prior to D-Day. Taken from an A20 bomber the two images show Normandy
Beach one month before and again, the night before the invasion, to ensure there
were no warning signs that the Germans may have become aware of the planned
attack. "These are the first pictures ever taken in the dark of night
from a plane, using Edgerton's electronic flash," Naylor says.

When Margaret Bourke-White died she bequeathed her entire collection of cameras
to Naylor, including the camera she used to take the first cover for LIFE magazine.
From Mathew Brady's rare group of 19th century Civil War images to Jackie
Onassis sunbathing nude on the Greek island of Scorpio, the Naylor Collection
is surely diversified.

"The Bradys stand alone, though," Naylor says. "They are all
from the original negatives. If you look at them through a magnifying glass
you can see the difference in the paper. It was less glossy before the turn
of the century and of course lenses were not as good, so the print itself was
never as sharp."

The most fascinating part of the collection stems from Naylor's interest
in espionage. During the Cold War his business was producing heat exchangers
for planes and Russia was interested in acquiring information as to how these
were built. A Russian Army general disguised in civilian clothes paid a visit
to Naylor and agreed to gain access for him into Russia through Finland.

"I was met at the airport by a KGB spy who became my escort for the trip,"
Naylor recalls. "We went to the southern part of Russia where we discussed
plans to build my heat exchangers. I told my escort of my interest in rare espionage
spy equipment--cameras, knives--anything...

Modern Spy Camera

Robotic Spy Camera. An invention of the Benthos Corporation on
Cape Cod, Massachusetts. This underwater camera, controlled from
a mother ship, has a camera, which transmits images to the bridge
of the mother ship, from any depth. It is used for search and
recovery missions as well as to explode enemy mines. The robots
helped find the submerged RMS Titanic and the German battleship
Bismarck, and other sunken ships.

"When I arrived home from Russia a package came to the United Nations
for me and I got a call from a man I didn't know at the Russian Embassy,
requesting that I meet him at a small restaurant on Third Avenue. `There
will be a package lying on the seat next to me from your friend at the KGB,'
he told me.

"There was no conversation and I left him an envelope with the payment
we had agreed upon. I didn't open my package until I got home. I felt
as much like a spy as anyone could have at that point. Inside I found knives,
guns, and cameras. A month later a second package arrived and this is how my
spy camera collection was formed."

In one glass case there is now a lady's delicate handbag with its place
for makeup and a hidden compartment for her spy camera. A German homing pigeon
holds a camera strapped to its stomach; cigarettes in a package contain tiny
spy cameras; small weapons are disguised in a cane. Nothing here is what it
appears to be. "The FBI still visits me yearly to show new members the
tools used in those early days," Naylor says.

After 31/2 hours I am still wandering through the museum. Here is Jacques Cousteau's
favorite camera and the exquisite violin that belonged to concert violinist
Leopold Godowsky who, with Leopold Mannes, developed color film.

"When Godowsky died his wife Frankie called me and said, `Jack,
Leopold wanted you to have all of his files, letters, and research papers as
well as his violin. Bring a truck!'"

In one corner sits the world's first movie projector and I turn the crank
to see pictures in motion! And here is the world's largest camera that
Naylor acquired from a German professor at Boston College and, of course, the
world's smallest one, a Soviet KGB camera measuring 15/8" in length
by 5/8 of an inch wide.

A special camera using 70mm film displays a 35-foot long color photograph that
covers the length of the glass case while a large underwater spy camera that
is self-propelled and made by Benthos Corporation on Cape Cod is a major piece
in the collection. It is currently used to search for underwater mines. This
camera was a crucial tool in the finding of both the Titanic and the Bismarck.

Such memorabilia would be incomplete without the large wooden Playboy camera
that took the 8x10 centerfold pictures for 30 years. I suspect there are a number
of these images in the collection, but have yet to be privy to them.

A sadder memory shows George Eastman's suicide note while another relic
is Queen Victoria's purse with her portrait on the outside, each a treasure
in the history of photography.

Naylor's former collection sold to the government of Japan for the price
of $9,000,000, and this 30,000 piece collection is priced at $20,000,000. It
is a photographic history of our world and we shall miss it when it finds its
new home.